The Way to Game the Walk of Shame by Jenn P. Nguyen (Excerpt)
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Transcript of The Way to Game the Walk of Shame by Jenn P. Nguyen (Excerpt)
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Before I even opened my eyes, I knew something was wrong.
I wasn’t in my bed like I should be, surrounded by the cream
duvet comforter that Mom and I had gotten from Macy’s last
month. The fabric under my fingertips was cool and kind of
scratchy.
Evidence number two: It smelled different. Not in a bad way.
Just not like the apple-cinnamon air freshener that Mom loved
and sprayed all over the house, despite the fact that Dad and I
hated cinnamon. I usually countered it by walking around the
house with vanilla candles. As a result, our house smelled sweeter
than the largest bakery in town. Ironic, because none of us could
actually bake.
I sucked in another deep breath to be sure. Nope, there
were no apples, cinnamon, or vanilla of any kind here. Instead,it smelled like cotton with a faint touch of pine and grass.
But the most damning evidence of all was the muscular,
1{Taylor}
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bare back of a half-naked—at least I hoped it was just half, since
I couldn’t see beneath the navy blanket wrapped around his
hips—guy lying beside me. Who definitely should not be in
my bed.
“Oh god. Oh. My. God.” My voice came out in a hoarse
squeak. I squeezed my eyes shut before opening them again.
Once. Twice. Over and over until fuzzy stars appeared on the
pale-blue ceiling—a ceiling that was also not mine—but he
wouldn’t disappear.
And the stars didn’t help my throbbing head. Why hadn’t
anyone warned me that drinking would make me feel like crap
the next day?
With shaky hands, I peered beneath the covers, and—
whoosh—a sigh of relief escaped. Thank god I was fully clothed.
If you could call the lacy black tank and capris that Carly had
stuffed me into the night before fully clothed. But besides that,
everything else looked normal. Except for the strange room and
the half-naked guy I was in bed with.
I was in a crapload of trouble. Why had I let Carly drag me to
that party last night? (Note to self: Nothing good ever comes
from listening to that girl.) But she’d caught me in a weak
moment. Granted, I had a bunch of weak moments after I
got my wait-list letter from Columbia.
But seriously, me, Taylor Simmons. Wait-listed! I still couldn’t
believe it. Didn’t they know who I was? Did they even look at
my application, for god’s sake? It was impeccable, and I turned
it in extra early. I even had to add an extra page for my list ofaccomplishments. I should have been a shoo-in.
But the months passed, and no acceptance letter. And they
didn’t respond to my e- mails and phone calls to check if the
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computers were down. Or if the acceptance committee was
all sick and hospital-bound. Nothing. Until finally, a measly wait-
list letter last month.
Anyway, that wasn’t the point. Not really. The point was that
I’d been dragged to the party . . . and then I’d left. Obviously. But
where was I now? And how did I get here? Where was Carly,
and why hadn’t she stopped me or—
“Hmph.” The guy flopped over onto his stomach, away
from me.
Heart racing, I could barely move. My chest tightened, but I
didn’t breathe, didn’t blink, until the soft snoring from his side
of the bed resumed. And even then, I could only let out short
half breaths.
That was close. Too close. I needed to get out of here. Now.
I cautiously eased off the mattress, inch by inch, wincing
as the slight movement made my head pound harder. My toes
touched the soft carpet, and I pushed myself upright, freezing
for a full minute every time the bed creaked. Only a bit farther.
After what felt like hours—although it was probably only a
few minutes—I slipped off the edge of the bed and took a step
toward the door. Big mistake. The floor’s creak was like a shot-
gun blasting across the room. The guy stirred, and I dove
toward the ground, landing on the maroon carpet with a soft
thump. My head smacked against my forearm. Ouch.
What the . . . ? A name was written on my left forearm in my
curly handwriting. My name. Taylor Simmons. How hammered
had I been to scribble my own name on my arm? Seriously, whatthe hell happened last night?
There was no time to think about it now. Still on my hands
and knees, I stumbled around the dark room for my silver
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sandals. The only noise was the soft snoring from the lump on
the bed.
Still . . . who was my partner in crime? Could it be someone I
knew, or was it—holy crap—a random guy I met at the party?
Was I a harlot like in those Regency romance novels I hid in the
back of my nightstand?
Or was courtesan the right word? It sounded classier, at least.
“Oh god.” I shook my head and resisted the urge to smack
my palm against my forehead. Now wasn’t the time to get
technical.
A sliver of sunlight shone through the top of the window
shades, casting a shadow over his face, which was still partially
buried in the pillows. I peered over the edge of the mattress but
couldn’t see more than his muscular, deeply tanned back. I
thought his hair was dark, but I couldn’t be sure. Even though
I knew I should get the hell out of here, a part of me—probably
the part that was still drunk—hesitated. I had to know who he
was. But each time I tried to get closer, the damn floor kept
creaking.
Jeez, what kind of house was this?
Against my better judgment, I snooped around the room,
careful to crawl on my elbows and stomach like a soldier on
enemy territory. Tennis shoes, video games, textbooks with
crisp pages that hadn’t been used very often, an admirable col-
lection of old-school comic books . . . Bingo! I hit the jackpot
when I tossed a dirty magazine out of the way and found a
stack of pictures. I shoved my tangled, dark hair out of my faceand moved a little closer to the light.
Cars and girls. Loads of them. Girls, I mean. And there was a
lot of skin in most of them. My cheeks flushed hotly at a picture
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of a girl and the minuscule bikini that could barely restrain her
large boobs, which she thrust toward the camera with a coy
grin. I couldn’t even tell if she was a redhead or a brunette. Just
teeth, lips, and boobs. Flip. A blond with boobs. Another blond
with boobs. A picture of someone’s legs on the beach.
“Come on. Show your face,” I muttered with a quick upward
glance to make sure my unknown partner was still sleeping.
He was.
Finally, I found a picture with a guy in it. He was standing
in profile, but his face was turned toward the camera, dipped
down toward— what else?— more boobs. His nose was pretty
straight, aside from the teeniest bump at the bridge. Slightly
spiky dark blond hair. Laughing dark- gray eyes that glanced to
the side. His jaw was sort of large, which could be from an under-
bite, but it suited him. Especially when he smiled. So very hot.
And familiar.
My head jerked to the smooth, lounging back. Then I fo-
cused on the tiny glimpse of black Chinese characters trailing
down his left forearm. I’d seen that tattoo close-up once before.
Everyone claimed it meant “Just live.” But for all I knew, it actu-
ally meant “Gum lover.”
A low groan escaped my lips. No, no, no. Not him. Anybody
but Evan McKinley, Nathan Wilks High School’s very own leg-
endary manwhore. Said to have screwed so many girls that he
had to get a new surfboard, because his old one was full of
nicks in memory of each new conquest.
Killing any remaining traces of hope that I was wrong, hestretched out his left arm, and I could see his name written on
his skin. Evan McKinley. In my handwriting.
WHERE WERE THOSE DAMN SANDALS?
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I crawled around so fast, I was pretty sure I’d have perma-
nent carpet burn on my elbows. I didn’t care. If anyone caught
me within a yard of Evan, the rumor mill would explode. It had
been hard enough to squash the gossip that spread last year
when I’d nearly drowned in the Harrison Parks community pool
and he’d saved me. Since then, I’d steered clear of anything that
had to do with him.
Which would really suck if anyone knew I’d spent the night
in his bed.
Shoes, shoes . . . maybe I didn’t need them. Dad had bought
them for me when I became editor of the school yearbook. He
probably wouldn’t even notice that they were missing, but Mom
definitely would. She’d been the one who persuaded him to get
them for me despite their ridiculous price—you would have
thought the crystals were real diamonds— instead of the modest
black pumps I needed for my internship at his law firm next
year. “You need something pretty! Something fun!” she kept say-
ing over and over. Weird how I was more like Dad, even though
I wasn’t his biological daughter. The only thing I’d gotten from
Mom was her brown eyes.
And she would give me hell if I didn’t have my shoes.
Besides, I didn’t know how far from home I was. And I already
wasn’t looking forward to the walk of shame I had ahead of
me. I wiggled even more beneath the bed, arms spread out in
search.
A sleepy male voice laced with amusement suddenly drifted
over my head. “They’re under my desk.”“What?” I scrambled out and shot upright, smacking the back
of my head against Evan’s jaw. He must have been leaning over
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the bed, watching me. A loud crack echoed through the room
before we both sprang apart, each groaning loudly. Gah, his jaw
was as hard as a hammer, and I was the screw he’d nailed. Not
exactly the best metaphor, but he’d knocked whatever literary
sense I had out of me.
When the pain finally lessened, I glanced up. Evan was
turned to the side, slightly bent over, both hands massaging his
cheeks and jaw as though checking if anything was broken.
With a mind of their own, my eyes slid down his body. I’d seen
him at the pool and gym before, but I’d never actually looked at
him. At least, not this closely.
Light freckles were sprinkled where his very tan shoulders
and back came together. Thank god he was wearing a pair of
wrinkled khaki shorts—although they rode pretty low on his
hips. On one side, a pale line peeked out beneath his tan. A spot
that was probably never in the sun and no one ever saw. At
least no one he wasn’t sleeping with.
“Uh . . .” My head nearly burst from the instant heat that
sprang to my cheeks. I tore my eyes away and focused on a
tropical postcard hanging on the edge of his mirror, squashing
the unwanted yet not unreasonable disappointment that he
was wearing clothes. This was not the time to be ogling Evan
McKinley.
“So, I guess I should say good morning.” He stretched his
arms over his head and grinned down at me, enjoying my
discomfort. I saw his lean biceps ripple distractingly out of the
corner of my eyes. “Isn’t that what people are supposed to sayfirst thing in the morning?”
Look away, Taylor. Look away. I shaded my eyes against the
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tantalizing view and focused on the lines on my palm. “I don’t
know. Shouldn’t you know the morning-after protocol better
than me?” Damn, I shouldn’t have said that.
To my surprise, he threw his head back and laughed. “Yeah,
I guess there’s no denying that truth.”
I clamped my jaw shut before anything else inappropriate
slipped out, and my eyes longingly glanced toward the door.
I should have slid out when I had the chance.
Did we have to go through the polite pleasantries? Couldn’t
we just forget about each other as though last night (and this
morning) hadn’t happened? Like we didn’t know each other?
Oh god. He probably didn’t know me. Just because I knew
who he was didn’t mean he knew who I was. Aside from my
choking out “Thank you” after he’d saved me at the pool, we’d
never spoken to each other before (or since). Not to mention, I
had looked like a drowned rat that day, so I kind of hoped he
didn’t remember. Besides, he must have saved hundreds of girls
in the past year. I’d even seen a girl pretend to drown in front of
him just to get some lip action.
Nah, Evan couldn’t possibly remember. I was just an average
one-night—wait, we hadn’t slept together, so scratch that. I was
a random, strange girl in his room. And it was going to stay
that way.
I climbed to my feet, intending to make a quick escape,
when a wave of nausea caught me by surprise. My mouth filled
with a bitter taste. Urgh. I pressed a hand against my lips as my
vision blurred.Evan reached forward as though he was going to catch me.
Either me or my vomit. I automatically backed up a few steps
until my back was pressed against his desk chair.
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“The bathroom’s over there,” he said with a jab over his right
shoulder. “I guess you’re a bit of a lightweight, huh?”
Pride made me swallow back the bile that struggled to climb
out of my throat. “No, I’m all right,” I choked out.
“Are you sure? I mean, you really shouldn’t be keeping it
in. Especially if you’re going to eat breakfast. You know, eggs,
cereal, or bacon. Or sausages, if you prefer that. Me, I like the
crunchiness of bacon. Especially when paired with some warm
pancakes, gooey butter, and syrup that drips all over the place
and runs down—”
The images he painted made me want to give up the fight
and hurl on the carpet right there. “No, just—stop. I can’t—” I
stopped trying to breathe since the air was making every-
thing worse, and I clenched my lips tightly together instead. I
squeezed my eyes closed. I will not throw up. I forbid myself to
throw up.
My eyes popped open again when Evan pried my fingers
away from my face. I was too surprised by his touch to react.
His laughing gray eyes twinkled down at me. He placed an
unopened water bottle in my hand and wrapped my fingers
around it. “Here, drink this. You’ll feel better.”
“I can’t.”
“Trust me. I know how to handle hangovers better than you.”
His hands moved up to my shoulders, and he pushed me down
on the plush leather chair. “Seriously, just drink it. It’s not poison.
I promise.”
I eyed the water. “And I’m just supposed to take your wordfor it?”
“No, you’ll take my word for it because you don’t have
a choice,” he said with a snort. “Besides, if you throw up in here,
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I’ll have to clean it up, and you can bet your ass I’m not doing
that.”
Hmm. He had a point. I took the bottle and forced myself to
drink. It threatened to come back up, but I didn’t stop until it was
empty. My full stomach bounced uncomfortably, but I didn’t feel
like I was going to die anymore.
As Evan watched me, his brows furrowed together until they
were practically one dark-blond line. Suddenly, he reached out
and touched my forehead.
I jerked my head back and batted his hand away, despite the
fact that it was nice and warm against my clammy skin. My fin-
gertips massaged my forehead, and I willed the whole situation
to go away. More than anything, I wished this was just a bad
nightmare and that I was actually all snug in bed. “Shit, I’m in so
much trouble. I’m supposed to meet Brian about the alumni
speech. But not before I KILL Carly and—why are you grinning?”
“Nothing, it’s just . . .” His smile grew so wide that his eyes
became slits. “You don’t look like the type of girl who curses
much. It’s sort of weird.”
I stared at him. My life was turned upside down, and that
was the most important thing on his mind right now? “Well, I
do when the situation calls for it. And believe me, this calls for it.
Shit. Shit. Shit.” I actually wasn’t used to cursing, but this was a
special occasion. And I was offended by his comment. Like I
was some type of Goody Two-Shoes. I would have thought
waking up in his bed should have eliminated that possibility.
And why did I even care what he thought of me?Evan let out a low whistle. “Okay, I get it, Taylor. You’re a
badass. Don’t make me have to censor you.”
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“What ever. I’m sure you’ve said much worse—” Wait a sec-
ond, did he just . . . “You called me Taylor.”
“Um, yeah. That is your name.”
“But how do you know my name?”
“Because it’s written on your arm?” He pointed at my left
arm just as I tried to cover it up. “Besides, we do go to school
together.”
My jaw dropped. Crap, he knew ME.
I leapt to my feet. The nausea and headache suddenly
vanished. It was as if the fear and anxiety had absorbed all the
alcohol. Best cure for a hangover? Imagine your reputation
tarnished in an instant. Better than tomato juice, or whatever
people drank to sober up.
“Listen, Evan. You have to promise me that you won’t tell
anyone about this. Ever.” I said the last word as firmly as I could,
channeling my dad in the courtroom when he intimidated a
witness. “No one can ever know that I spent the night here.
Especially with you.”
His forehead wrinkled. “And what’s so bad about me? You
know, it may be hard to believe, but girls are usually pretty
happy when they wake up in my room. Perky, too.”
“Uh, hello?” I grabbed the picture of Boobs Girl off the
ground and shoved it in his face.
Evan stared blankly down at the photo and scratched
his head, making his hair even more disheveled. My stomach
flopped.
“I don’t get it.”Even though it wasn’t possible, I could practically feel my
blood pressure rising. I ran my fingers through my own hair,
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jerking a bit at the clumpy tangles. “Look, I’m sure you’re right.
Plenty of girls would love to be here right now. Anyone but me.
Seriously. I’m not that kind of girl! I’m a Columbia girl. A future
lawyer like my dad. I don’t want be lumped in with a group of
bimbos who give pictures of themselves in tiny string bikinis to
random guys.”
Evan narrowed his eyes, but I could tell that he was hurt by
my rant. A pang of guilt hit me. “That’s not—”
“I know I’m being a jerk.” My hands dropped to my sides. Who
was I to judge them when I was in the same position? Although
technically, he was the one sleeping around, not them. So if
there was finger-pointing, it should be at him. “They’re not bim-
bos. I’m sure they’re all very nice. And pretty , from the . . . little
that I can actually see. Maybe their cameras slipped and they
accidentally took a picture of their boobs. How do I know?
Water can be pretty slippery.”
“No, I mean, this is a picture of her in her bra.” He leaned to-
ward me and tapped the picture still in my hand.
I dropped the picture like it burned and watched it flutter to
the carpet—thankfully, face down. “So, like I said, we should just
forget about last night. Not that I actually remember—I mean,
it was nothing.”
Evan clenched his fist to his bare chest and doubled over.
“Ouch. And here I was pulling out all my best moves for you.”
My cheeks burned. “Sorry, I didn’t mean—”
“I was joking.”
“Oh.”“You’re right, though. We should just forget this,” he contin-
ued, gesturing toward the bed and then at me. “Whatever this
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was never happened. We don’t even know each other. Hey, do
you need a ride home?”
I shoved him back when he took a few steps toward the
door. “No, I don’t need a ride! What part of this didn’t happen
don’t you understand? There will be no rides, no talking, not
even a glance between us in the future. Got that?”
“But what if I need to return your underwear or
something?”
“You don’t have my—” My hands lowered to my hips, and I
almost checked in front of him. “Ha-ha, very funny.”
The corners of his mouth jerked up into a smile again. “I try.”
“Well, from now on, there will be no more mention of my
underwear or any other undergarments to anyone.” I held out
a hand to him. “Deal?”
Was it my imagination, or did his eyes drop to check me out?
His gaze was back on mine in an instant, so I couldn’t be sure.
Still, I tugged at the thin straps of my tank top and wrapped my
arm across my small chest. I nodded toward my outstretched
hand. “Deal?” I repeated, louder this time.
His hand grasped mine, practically dwarfing it. His thumb
grazed my knuckles and sent shivers up and down my spine. I
forced myself to stand still and stare up at his face, hurting my
neck in the process.
“Deal.”
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2{Taylor}
The two-mile walk home took forever. Within minutes, I re-
gretted not accepting Evan’s offer to drive me home. I knew
why it would have been a bad idea, but with each painful step,
the reasons disappeared.
One thing’s for sure, these sandals were definitely not made
for walking.
Finally home, I barely had time to sneak into the bathroom
to throw up before my parents caught me. Kimmy, my nine-
year-old baby sister, was sitting at the top of the stairway when I
rushed past. She started to call out my name, but I motioned for
her to shush. The sweetheart nodded solemnly and mimicked
zipping her lips shut.
There was a knock on the bathroom door a few minutes
later. “Taylor? I didn’t think you’d be home so soon. I called yourphone earlier, but you didn’t pick up, so I called Carly and she
told me you were still asleep.”
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My hands automatically flew to my pockets, even though I
knew my phone wasn’t there. I must have left it at the party or
something. “Yeah, sorry, Mom. I think the ringer is off or some-
thing,” I called out, trying to sound as normal as I could.
“It’s okay. So did you have fun at the party? Did it help take
your mind off things?”
That was an understatement. “Yeah, I can honestly say it
really did.”
“I knew it would!” I could hear the glee in her voice. “Do you
want some breakfast? I made your favorite. French toast with a
side of mushroom hash browns. Heavy on the mushrooms.”
Urgh, more food talk. I plopped down next to the toilet
again, feeling crappy both inside and out. “Maybe a little later?
Let me shower first, okay?”
“Sure.”
Yeah, there was no way I could hide this hangover from
Mom and Dad. Especially Dad. That man could detect any hint
of weakness and lies. Which is why he’s a great lawyer. Although
right now, I wasn’t so proud of those skills.
Once the coast was clear, I poked my head out of the bath-
room to check. The hall was empty. Only Kimmy still sat by the
top of the stairs, like a guard dog with braids.
I cleared my throat and motioned her forward. “Can you let
me know when Mom and Dad are gone? I don’t want to see
them right now.”
“But—”
“If you help me and keep this a secret between us, then youcan have my French toast with extra syrup. Deal?”
I don’t know if it was the thought of keeping a secret from
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our parents or the French-toast bribe, but her smile widened
until all you could see were her shiny teeth. “Deal!”
After she left, I hopped into the tub. Well, not so much
hopped as stumbled around with my head held between
my hands in an attempt to make the throbbing stop. Thankfully,
the steaming-hot water eased my headache, making everything
feel better. Not perfect , but better.
I stayed in the shower for ages, until the hot water turned
warm and finally piercing cold. Not wanting to turn into an icicle,
I finally got out. My fingertips were already wrinkled prunes.
Wrapping a thick cream towel around myself, I wiped at the
condensation on the mirror and stared myself down. “So you
had a minor setback with Columbia yesterday and Evan this
morning. Big whoop.” I narrowed my eyes at my own reflection.
“It doesn’t mean anything. You’re still Taylor Simmons. You’re
still you. You’re still awesome. And this time next year, you’ll be
sitting on the Columbia campus thinking, Evan who?”
“Tay, Mom and Dad left. Can I eat the French toast in your
room?”
A horrified denial automatically sprang to my lips at the
image of crumbs and syrup all over my sheets, but I pushed it
down at Kimmy’s earnest tone. I owed her one for helping me
out anyway. “Sure, but uh, make sure you get extra napkins.”
“Okay!”
I let out a slow, deep breath and pointed a wrinkled finger
at the mirror to continue my pep talk. “So pull yourself together.
Tomorrow you’re going to go to school and pretend nothinghappened. Actually, not even pretend. Because. Nothing.
Happened.”
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Evan’s grinning face popped into my head. His dark- gray
eyes twinkled with amusement like he was listening to my
speech. I shivered and swiped at the mirror again, hoping it
would help clear my mind. “Nothing.”
-
Thank god I had Sunday to lie around and sleep, or I doubt I
would have ever made it to school. Kimmy and I hung out in my
room and watched movies all day long. After she finished the
French toast, I brought the dirty plate out myself and pretended
I’d eaten it. Luckily, Mom had errands to run that day, so she
couldn’t ask me too much about the party.
I wished avoiding people at school on Monday were as
easy as avoiding my parents. Everyone’s eyes were on me as I
walked to class. Seriously. Heads turned, and people whispered
behind their hands with every step I took. And the worst part
was they weren’t even trying to be subtle about it.
There had to be another reason—any reason—that they
would be looking at me. Maybe I had won some sort of an
award. Or Brian failed a test or something, and I was the vale-
dictorian now. (One can dream.) At this point, I wouldn’t even
mind being the one who failed the hypothetical test. Anything
would be better than the truth.
I fumbled with the combination on my locker. Out of the
corner of my eyes, I saw a brunette girl in a black sophomore
sweatshirt turn to some guy beside her and point at me. At firstI couldn’t hear what they said, but my ears perked up at Evan’s
name. Straining to hear, I leaned in closer.
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“I think she’s the one who went home with Evan McKinley
after the party,” she said in a hushed tone.
“No, way. Isn’t she like a nerd or something? Like a
teacher’s pet?”
“Everyone calls her the Ice Queen. Now she’s just another
one of his flings.”
He snickered. “Guess even queens can’t resist Evan
McKinley.”
Party. Evan. Fling.
No, no, no. This had to be a dream. A really sucky, horrible
nightmare.
Even though my hangover was gone, I suddenly felt like
throwing up again. Forgetting why I was even at my locker, I
stumbled away without opening it. Everything in front of me
spun. The lockers. The other students. This couldn’t be happen-
ing. This had to be some type of Twilight Zone or something.
Or a bad romance novel where I was the gentle, well- bred,
titled daughter who had her reputation ruined because of a
scandalous, notorious rake.
Reading about it was way better than experiencing it.
But damn it, how could everyone know already? And what
exactly did they know?
It was the longest walk of my life. Like someone had de-
cided to build an extra mile into the hallway over the weekend
just to torture me.
Even Faith Watkins, whom everyone at school nicknamed
the Reincarnated Mother Mary, gave me a sympathetic lookwhen I passed her. The little Catholic girl with the white sweat-
ers and JESUS LOVES ME stickers on her backpack knew. And if she
knew, that meant everyone knew.
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Once I was finally able to reach the safety of first period, I
plopped onto my usual seat without looking at anyone around
me. They were still whispering and pointing, but at least now
there were only twenty-five of them instead of the entire school.
My forehead dropped into my hands, gripping it tightly as
though that would help shrink my headache. God, could this
day get any worse?
Mr. Peters strolled into class and closed the door behind
him with a loud bang. “All right, did everyone finish the report
on a significant event of the 1900s?”
There were moans and groans, and a couple of students
immediately started rambling off excuses why they didn’t do
their homework.
Glad for the distraction and to finally have things back to
normal, I let out a sigh of relief and opened my bag to get the
red folder I stuck the report in to keep the pages fresh. It took
me less than a minute to realize it wasn’t there. Where was it?
When I had finished, I had immediately put it in my folder . . . and
left it on my desk at home.
Crap.
I shuffl ed through the loose papers in my bag again, even
though I knew that the report was at home, neatly stapled and
ready to go. I had finished it days ago but forgot to put it in my
bag yesterday because I was so sick.
After making a couple of notes in his binder, Mr. Peters
moved around the classroom to collect the papers. As he got
closer and closer to my seat, the panic in my stomach grew.I prayed for a miracle, an earthquake or tsunami to suddenly
hit, even though something like that had never hit Wilmington
before. Or anywhere in North Carolina. But that’s what miracles
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were, right? I mean, if Evan McKinley and I could hook up—or
whatever we did Saturday night—then that was proof enough
that the impossible could happen!
Heck, I wouldn’t even have minded a meteor right now.
“Ms. Simmons?”
“Uh, yes?”
With a frown, he waved the papers in the air. “I need your
report.”
My eyes lowered, and I traced the old P ¶ Q carving on the
corner of my desk. “Well, you see, it’s funny. Kind of. The thing
is . . .” My voice lowered into a half whisper. “I think I left my re-
port at home.”
“You think?”
“I mean, I know I did.” My attempt at an apologetic smile felt
forced and weird. But it wasn’t my fault. I’d never been in this
position before. I didn’t know what to do.
He blinked at me like he still didn’t understand. “You don’t
have your report?”
“No.” Why did he keep making me repeat myself?
“You can’t blame her, Mr. Peters,” a loud voice suddenly called
out from the back of the room. With a smirk, Lauren Tillman
leaned back in her chair and swept her fiery-red hair over one
slender shoulder. “Taylor had a really busy weekend.”
My weak smile melted like an icicle on the sidewalk in the
middle of summer.
Even though we’d gone to school together forever, I could
barely count the number of times Lauren had talked to me. Oreven about me. I didn’t even know she knew my name.
Mr. Peters shook his head. “Still, this isn’t like you, Taylor. Your
record is usually so impeccable.”
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“Oh, don’t worry. Little Miss Perfect blemished a lot more
than just her record at the party. And after,” Lauren loudly
continued.
At that, the whole class snorted with laughter. A couple of
guys in the back row winked and made kissy-faces at me.
“All right, that’s enough.” Mr. Peters had to smack his binder
against the side of my desk to get everyone to shut up. “Let’s
just start class.”
He leaned down and lowered his voice a bit. “You can bring
it to me tomorrow, but I’m disappointed in you, Taylor. Really. I
expected more from you. If I can’t trust you to hand in a simple
paper on time, how am I supposed to let you plan Career Day?
Or give the alumni presentation?”
It was as though all the blood had drained from my face. I
could feel myself getting light- headed. “No, I swear I did the re-
port. I did it on the first test-tube baby in the U.S. It was Elizabeth
Carr in Virginia. If you want, I could run home and get it! Or my
mom can bring it to school for me, or—”
He waved his hand to stop my defense. “Look, we’ll talk
about this later. Just see me after class.”
“Yes, sir.” I made the mistake of looking behind me and lock-
ing eyes with Lauren again.
She pursed her lips in mock sympathy and wiggled her fin-
gers at me in a half wave.
Cheeks flaming, I whipped my head back around. My fingers
dug into the sides of my chair. Gah. I wanted to crawl beneath
my desk and die. The mockery and gossiping were one thing,but I had never had a teacher be disappointed in me. Much less
a teacher who had connections to the alumni and faculty at
Columbia. This was the worst time to get on Mr. Peters’s bad
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♥ 22 ♥
side. A good word from him to the guest speaker could make
all the difference in the world. Could turn my being wait-listed
into an acceptance.
And now it was all slipping down the drain.
Double crap.
-
“You!”
I didn’t look up. Not even when Carly tapped the top of
my head with a binder. Twice. Though it throbbed, I buried my
head even deeper in my arms, trying to disappear. I didn’t want
to see all the eyes around the cafeteria staring at me, like they’d
been doing all morning. I thought it might die down a bit
by lunch, but I couldn’t even eat my barbecued meatloaf and
steamed vegetables in peace.
“First you don’t pick up my call, and now you won’t even
look at me?” Carly’s voice got more high-pitched with each
word. From previous experience, I knew this wasn’t a good
sign. She was like a ticking time bomb, and if I didn’t respond,
the lunch ladies would be scraping pieces of me out of the
gravy bin. She was my best friend and I loved her, but her nosi-
ness and booming voice were probably going to kill me. “How
could you ditch me at the party?”
I turned my head and wiggled my nose when my hair
flopped over my face. The strands parted with my loud sigh.
Her face hovered over me with a scowl.“Oh, hi. How was civics?”
“As exciting as a class taught by my mother could be. She
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♥ 23 ♥
called me sweetie pie and fixed my hair in front of everyone.”
Carly slumped into the seat across from me and rolled her dark
eyes so far back, I worried they’d get stuck. “I was tempted to
stab myself with a pen just to have an excuse to leave.”
I usually didn’t bring up her mom, but I needed some-
thing to distract Carly, at least for a bit, and her mom was her
kryptonite. She could complain about her all afternoon if she
wanted to.
Carly’s mom was a substitute teacher, and although she
promised her kids she’d never work at their schools, the econ-
omy was so bad that sometimes she couldn’t help it. It was still
money, after all. This was the first time she’d taught one of Carly’s
classes, though—something Carly had been dreading all week.
I liked Mrs. Winters, but that was because she spoiled me.
Carly swore her mom would still love me even if I egged their
house weekly, because she approved of “my career choice.” In
Mrs. Winters’s mind, doctors, lawyers, and dentists were the
way to go. Either to become one or to meet one—like Carly’s
older sister, Nancy, did. She married an optometrist. The crème
de la crème.
So her younger daughter’s love for drama and music was a
touchy subject between them. Although with Carly’s over-the-
top theatrics, theater was the obvious choice.
Carly opened a bag of veggies, once again on her never-
ending quest to lose weight. “I’m asking again. Why did you
ditch me at the party? And why did you lie to me?”
“I don’t remember leaving the party.” I squinted up at her inconfusion. “And when did I lie?”
“Uh, after you disappeared, I texted you a gazillion times, and
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finally you texted back that you were already home, remember?”
She waved a carrot stick in the air like a sword. “Imagine my
surprise when your mom called me the next day asking about
you. You’re lucky that I’m brilliant at improv and was able to
cover for you.”
Chewing on my lower lip, I tugged on my ear and tried to
remember texting her, but I couldn’t. I still didn’t know what
happened that night. “Sorry.”
She let out a heavy sigh and poked me with her carrot stick.
“Seriously, though, do you know how worried I was? Don’t dis-
appear on me like that again! And could you please sit up? I feel
like I’m talking to a corpse.”
“Sorry,” I said again, pulling myself upright and propping my
chin on my palm. “But you know, none of this would have hap-
pened if you hadn’t dragged me to that party. And gotten me
drunk.”
Carly scoffed and rolled her eyes. “What else was I supposed
to do, let you keep moping at home and camping out by your
mailbox for news from Columbia like you’ve been doing all
month? You’ll get accepted. One little party isn’t going to change
that. This is our senior year! We have to experience it! And it
was your own fault for not eating all day. That’s why it hit you
so bad. You barely drank.”
Really? I swear I must have drunk a lot more to have felt that
crappy. Maybe Evan was right. Maybe I was a lightweight.
My fingers tapped against the table. I was irritated and
wanted to blame someone. Anyone. But I couldn’t blame Carly.Mainly because I knew she would blow up at me if I did. But
she was right. It’s not like she dragged me kicking and scream-
ing to the party. Or poured the drinks down my throat. The
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wait-list letter had made me panic, and I was stupid. Really
stupid.
“Sorry,” I finally said.
“I forgive you.” She dusted off her hands and picked up her
Diet Coke. “So now that we’re done with all the apologies, you
have to tell me. What did you do after you left the party with
Evan?”
“I don’t know.”
“Don’t know or won’t say?”
“I don’t know . Seriously.”
“Hmm.” Carly continued munching on another carrot stick.
Crunch. Crunch. Crunch. “As your friend, I know I’m supposed
to believe you, but seeing how you and Evan were making out
at the party in front of everyone makes it kind of hard. Especially
when you both disappeared together afterward. It was all any-
one could talk about.”
Great, my first time making out with a guy, and I can’t even
remember any of it. At least now I knew how everyone found
out.
My head flew up, and I winced. Oh god, what if I was awful?
Like too- much-saliva, garlic- breath horrible? I’d only kissed three
guys in my life, and none for more than ten seconds. And barely
any tongue. I wasn’t exactly experienced. Then again, since Evan
ended up taking me home, I guess I couldn’t have been that
bad, right?
Not knowing the inner turmoil her comment caused, Carly
picked up my unused fork and stabbed at the cold mysterymeatloaf on my plate. “Are you sure you guys didn’t do it?”
“Carly!”
“Come on! You have to at least tell me if you did. Remember,
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I lied to your mom for you.” She waved the fork at me. “You owe
me some details.”
“I told you. Nothing happened.”
“Seriously?” Her eyebrow rose. “You went home with the
dude, and you guys didn’t do anything? How is that even pos-
sible? He’s Evan McKinley, for god’s sake.”
I looked down at my half-eaten plate. The memory of wak-
ing up in his bed was still fresh in my head. And the image of
a nearly naked Evan was practically seared into my mind. “I don’t
know. It’s complicated.”
Her dark eyes brightened with excitement. “All the best sto-
ries start off that way. Spill it.”
I let out a halfhearted laugh. No matter how hard the day
was, I was glad to have Carly by my side. Loud and bossy as
she was. “Well, it all started when I woke up and didn’t smell
any apples . . .”